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Spa Resort Hawaiians
ActivityOnsen
Fukushima, Tohoku

Spa Resort Hawaiians

A tropical hot spring resort built over coal mines in the 1960s after the mines closed. The story of former miners' daughters trained as hula dancers to save the town was made into the hit film "Hula Girls" (2006).

Duration

Half day to full day

Admission

from ¥3,570 (adults); ¥2,250 (children)

Hours

Typically 9:30–21:30 (weekends/holidays) or 10:00–21:30 (weekdays); last entry 1 hour before closing. Closed on occasional facility-wide closure days — check official calendar.

Best Season

Year-round

Access

Free shuttle bus from Iwaki-Yumoto Station (approx. 15 min)

Location

Why Visit

  • 1

    The original hula show continues twice daily — performed by descendants of the first dancers who saved the town

  • 2

    Thermal water from the mines fills the largest indoor hot spring pool in Japan

  • 3

    The attached hotel complex lets you spend a full resort day without ever leaving warm water

  • 4

    "Hula Girls" film screened nightly in the resort — essential context for the visit

Local Tips

A full resort complex with 11 thermal pools, a large wave pool, hula dancer shows, and water slides — genuinely entertaining for all ages. The hula shows (free with admission) are professionally produced. Built in 1966 to employ coal miners as the local industry declined — an interesting social history connects to the film 'Hula Girls' (2006). Stay overnight for the full experience.

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